514 BUEEAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [bull. 40 



With -es ON BEACH (no. 45) : 



Ti-a^ne's canoe is on beach 102.34 ha'ng'aHis canoe comes to be 



on beach 101.40 

 With -ll IN HOUSE (no. 46) : 



Tclwal'l to be seated in house Jclwd'g'alll to sit down in 



173.20 house 24.5 



yd'qumg'alil to fall dead in house [plural] X 110.34 



With -xs IN CANOE (no. 48) : 



ho'guxs they have gone aboard Tio'x^woIexs they start to go 

 224.9 aboard 84.37 



With -ga among (no. 7) : 



dd'g-ilgala to carry among them 240.6 

 lE'Hg'ilgala to kill among them X 14.21 



With -.TZ,(a) BEHIND (no. 15): 



dd'q'ilxLdla to take secretly 99.18 



g'd'lculxLa¥ house following behind; i. e., house obtained in 

 marriage 220.41 



The explanation of these forms is not beyond all doubt. While 

 in most cases the distinction of motion and position is quite 

 clear, there are other cases in which the form in -g'il- is not 

 applied, although motion seems to be clearly implied. We 

 have laxs to go aboard 147.38; ddxs to take aboard 

 114.25, while the two examples of Tio'gaxs and lid'x^walEXS 

 22.9 and 84.37, bring out the distinction with the same suffix. 



The same element is evidently combined in -^g-aaLEla (no. 96) 

 which may thus be a compound of -g'il and a suffix -LEila). 



On the whole, -g-il seems to serve as a kind of inchoative, and 

 the suffixes which take this suffix do not often take -x'Hd 

 (no. 90), or the inchoative completive -d. Still we have 

 ax^d'ltslod TO put into 178.8. 



§ 39. ALPHABETICAL LIST OF SUFFIXES 



The following list of suffixes is arranged alphabetically, the letters 

 following by groups the order here given: 



E dz, is, ts! 



a, a, e, e, e, i, i, y g', Ic' , Tc'! 



d, 6, 0, u, w 5r«, l^, Ic!^ 



h, p, p.', m g, q, q! 



d, t t!, n X', y", X 



s I, I, L, L, l! 



§ 39 



